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Old October 12th 04, 06:08 AM
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Yes, what he said!

No way on the 12v into a 5v LiIon battery!
True, there are two way's to blow up those, one running them
completely dead, the other to over charege.

I tried the second by using a higher rating fuse to try a second time to
see if
the first 'blow' was a mistake. I though things were going OK until 2
minutes
later when the smell of toasing plastic alerted me!
The 12-5v transformer AND the 1550 was too hot to comfortably hold!

That's why I thought I'd toasted the charging circuit in the 1500, but even
with an old (2/3rd charged) battery it still wouldn't charge.

The official car adapter from HP gracefully shut down with some internal
current limiter.
The cheapo RShack adapter just blew another fuse.

Oh well.

Chris


Andy Durbin wrote:

(Ronald) wrote in message . com...


The 1550 charging module appears to not notice the battery if the
voltage has dropped down a certain level.

Kick-start your battery by connecting it for a few min's (start with
30secs) to a normal car-battery charger. If at hand use a voltage
measuring tool to see if the voltage of the battery has increased (or
just put it back in the 1550).

If the voltage is high enough, the 1550 will 'see'the battery again
and will start charging.

Ronald



Flashing (a few miliseconds)with a car battery or charger was a
technique that could be used to burn out the whiskers that cause
internal shorts in NiCd cells. The Aero battery is not NiCd but
Lithium Ion. I don't think these batteries have the whisker problem
and I would never connect a high current source to one. I think there
is a significant risk that the battery would explode.


Andy